gramtan gmhgtman. THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1865. Bible Work in New Jersey.—Cum berland County, N. J-, has, for long years, maintained a vigorous auxiliary of the American Bible Society. It has secured the generous service of leading civilians in the county—not alone the cheap patronage of their names-, -toth an occasional money contribution, but their personal efforts to give life and interest to it. Hon. Judge Elmer, of the Su preme Court of N. J-, and Hon. John T. Nixon, well known in the State and National Legislature, are of this class. The former is, we believe, President of the Society. There lies before us a handbill, notifying us that the Semi Centennial Anniversary of the Society « will be held in the grove of the Old Stone Church in Fairfield, on Tuesday, August Ist.” Judge Elmer, and the National Society’s Secretary Taylor, are among the speakers nanied. We hap pen to know the material of Cumberland, and so are sure that Tuesday was a day of rare interest at the Old Stone Church. We could not close such a notice as this, without mentioning the years past, when this Society was so deeply indebt ed to the services of that most amiable Christian and faithful worker for Christ, the late Francis 0. Brewster, of Bridge ton. Baptist Principles.— When we talk about the principles of a denomination, giving to them a denotninational name, we always suppose ourselves speaking of those which are distinctive of such a denomination, or lying at the base of its denominational existence. We notice that Rev. Alvah Hovey, D.D., is run ning through the National Baptist a series of articles, headed "First Baptist Principle,” " Second Baptist Principle, V &c. Going on as they have begun they are pretty likely to take the circle of a Christian theology, inclusive of the points which are the common ground of evangelical Christians. Take for exam ple the one reached last week, the “ Third Baptist Principle.” “ Every man has a right to obey the will of God as revealed to his own mind and con science by the Scriptures.” The writer of course, has no thought of claiming, for his denomination the monopoly of such an article of faith, but when he an nounces it as a Baptist Principle, any ordinary reader understands him as about to discuss a point, the affirmative of which constitutes a Baptist, and which non-Baptists of course ignore. W.e sug gest to our really worthy cotempoi;ary,that so infelicitous a heading ought at least to be so explained as to relieve the denominar tion of the savor of the wholesale ex-' elusiveness which it would seem to im ply. "Slavery. —ln this Union slavery has’ now no legal existence, except in Ken tucky and Delaware. Whatever the terms of the re-admission of the revolted States may be, it seems to be a foregone conclusion, both with them and at Wash ington, that thqy must come with con stitutions which forever forbid slavery. It will not be many months before the assent of the requisite number of States to the Constitutional Emancipation Amendment will be obtained; but in the meantime it seems to be a race between slavery itself and that amendment, whe ther the former shall run itself to no thing, or whether the latter shall kill it. In Kentucky, according to the report of the State Auditor, the case stands thus: In 1864, the slaves in that State num bered 203,907 who were valued in the tax books at $34,179,246, an average value of about $l7O each. Returns re ceived for 1865 from seventy-nine coun ties report 125,860 slaves, valued at $5,- 726,209, an average value per head of $45 50. In Delaware .no sane man would now give the former price of one able-bodied slave, for alKthat can be -mustered in the State, and, as things are, there is probably not a man who would care a nickle for retaining the in stitution, except for his spite against the Government. Presbyterian Papers in Richmond. —ln the days of yore, the Central Presbyterian was the principal Southern organ of the Old School Presbyterians. When, at the outbreak of the rebellion, the pressure of the Northern loyal sen timent drove Dr. Converse, with his Christian Observer, “to his.own place,” his paper became avowedly, what ’it be fore substantially was, the organ of"the United Synod, the Southern secession from our New School General, Assem bly. During the progress of the rebel lion, the Old and New School Southern Presbyterians found their treasonable adhesions stronger than their theological repulsions, and so became fused into the C. S. A. General Assembly. This left for the fusion two papers in Richmond, where but one was needed, and where, for the time being, even one could only live a starving life. The preemptory right to existence belonged to the “ Cen tral, n but Dr. Converse was a Yankee, with even more than the ordinary shifti ness and tenacity for a living which eha ract erisethe New Hampshire character, and hence was not likely to give up. The great fire finally came to his aid. The Central was burned out, while the Chris tian Observer was “providentially pre served.” , It resumed publication, issuing temporarily a bi-weekly yellow sheet, by measurement exactly half the size of the American Presbyterian, and, - Federal THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN. THURSDAY. AUGUST 3, 1865. currency having come into use, reduced the price from $lB to $4 a year, pro mising a weekly issue as soon as means for its circulation could be raised. So he seemed to step into the field as the sole organ of Southern Presbyterianism in Richmond—perhaps in the South. But there was grit in the Central, af ter all. Three weeks since it reappeared —size and price Bame as the Observer —and, like the latter, lifting the South tern ecclesiastical flag in opposition to the alleged purpose of the old General Assembly to extend itself over the South. It claims the field of Southern Presbyterianism, and heralds that claim over such endorsing names as Rev. Drs. B. M. Smith, M. D. Hoge, T. Y. Moore, and —shade of the United Synod!— Charles H. Read, and P. B. Price. We refer to these matters simply as a phase in the condition of affairs which may, in the end, have some bearing upon ecclesiastical construction. Simply be cause we like to see the world good natured, we might hope that the Obser ver and Central will work in the same field without friction,, but if so, the ex- Northerner will belie his antecedents. A-WORD TO THE PRESBYTER.- We owe an apology- to our worthy Cincinnati cotemporary of this name. As long ago as June we made a remark to which the Presbyter took exception, and courteously, but explicitly insisted upon something further from us. We laid aside the paper intending to attend to it when making up our next issue. It got mislaid, and being out of the way was, amid an unusual pressure of cares, forgotten. The mislaid paper has, at the moment of this writing, accidentally turned up, reminding us of a neglect for which we are truly sorry, as we had no intention of treating so really good a Christian co-worker with rude silence. The subject qf complaint is this:— Speaking of a' communication in the Banner of the Covenant, relating to cer tain matters in the K,. P. Church, upon which the. editor of that paper; animad verted, we said that it took “ exactly the ground of the Old School in the controversy which culminated in 183 1 !, that any relaxation of the ipsissima verba of a confession shall be treated as'a heresy. Of this the Presbyter says :■— We are surprised, at such a charge as this against the Old School. They never took the ground “that any relaxation of the ipsissima verba shall be treated as a heresy.” It is an injurious as well as an unfounded accusation. We call for proof. A few may havfe held the doctrine, but we never knew one who did. New School were charged by the Old School, or by some of them, with holding to the con fession “for substance of doctrine,” and some may have so held at the time of the division. We presume that few held these views, which are at the opposite extremes. To charge them at this day, we doubt not would be doing injustice to both churches. In 1858 Dr. .Hoge wrote in the Princeton Remeio in reference to the ipsissima verba theory: “It is a’perfectly notorious fact that there are hundreds of ministers in our church, and there always have been such ministers, who do not receive all the propositions con tained in the confession of faith and cate chisms.” He says, x moreoyer, that to require it “would have strangled £he church in its in fancy, and would kill it nowin a week.” We are_ confident, moreover, that no ecclesiastical action can be found that teaches the doctrine charged against us. The discussions in the time off the controversy and division do not indicate that the Old School are liable to such a charge. We call upon the American Pres byterian to prove or retract what it has published, or at least to publish this denial of it, r To take up the above article for com ment would probably be the beginning of a discussion with which we suppose that neither the Presbyter nor ourselves wish, in the present state of things, to en cumber our papers. The term ipsissi ma verba, as applied to a subscription to a creed, as generally used, has rather a technical than literal meaning, and rep resents so close an adherence to the de tails of doctrine expressed, as leaver no margin for dissent. It is in distinc tion from the form' of subscription agreed upon and laid down in minor matters, in the Adopting Act of 1129, viz: “ Agreement in, and approbation of the Confession of Faith,” etc., etc., “as being, in all the essential and necessary articles, good forms of sound words and systems of Christian doctrine.” If the distinction here made was not the ani mus of the prosecutions for heresy du ring the stormy periods of our Church, we are entirely at sea respecting our own ecclesiastical history, and if the men who, in their way, piloted the Old School through that storm, would not then have denounced the above quotation from the Princeton Review, and “pitch ed into,” the writer, we have mistaken them. The Presbyter admits that a few may have held the doctrine, and so long as, few or many, there were enough of them to remfethe Church, we see no way to meet the request kindly made, -that we should retract the passing- remark to which exception has been taken. We very cheerfully comply with the last al ternative proposed, arid publish above the Presbyter’s denial of it. GIVING AND . GETTING. A man who gives in proportion to his means is more likely to succeed in business than a niggard or a miser; he takes a larger and more comprehensive view of men and things than such persons, and is more likely to weigh rightly the-probabilities of success m this or that undertaking. But there is another class of objectors who say that they prefer doing one thing at a time. They had set their mind, they said, upon accu mulatmg a certain sum, and they wished, to be let alone until they had succeeded in accomplishing their object ; when they had dpne that, then, but not till, then, they would.retire from business and devote all their energies to giving. Well, 1 believe that if a-ihan does not Begin to give when he begins to get, or thereabouts, he will never begin to give at all. The two things must go side by side; they must, be com panions in the way through life.— Dr. Francis Crossley. A PHILADELPHIAN IN VACATION. The following was not written for pub lication, but that makes it all the better for the many friends of Brother Adams, who would like just such a talk with him in the hours of the unbent bow. Hence we take our liberties with it, and will settle the matter with him when we see him. East Concord, N. H., \ July- 25th, 1865. / lIVIIKR THE APPLE TREE. Dear Friend Mears:—There are times when one must think, and times when he must speak. With me, just now, the pressure of thinking and speak ing is oyer for a season, and I am dis posed topour out ink and words in the joy .ousness of my rebound from that pres sure. Now for the trees, the chickens, and the hay-making. I, don’t care a rusty cent for all the theology of the schools. I wouldn’t have a/logical pro cess in my brain on aby consideration ; and I would as soon have the cholera as make a speech. , It is reported of one of our old Ando ver Professors that he used to repair to his barn, and alone, turn summersaults on ,the hay. That were too Violent for me: I prefer to be stretched at length on the grass or carpet, and let the world bluster. We had a delightful Com mencement at Hanover. The popularity of Dr. Smith is evinced by the increase of funds and pupils. The salaries of the Faculty are increased each two hun dred dollars this year. About forty young men. have been admitted to the Freshman class, and others are coming. Prize speaking and orations by tin graduar ting class were good. Much att rntion is now given to rhetoric and orato y under the instruction of Professor Sanborn. The orations before the different sicieties were highly praised. Hon. Chief Justice Chase was present, and gave zes.to the occasion. He:, is a noble mail Dr. Massey, fronr~London, was my compan ion at the President’s board, lie is a genial, intelligent, good man. He has a clear and just appreciation of our jnational. life and destiny. He deserves our atten tions and love. The poet Saxe pas in his most humorous vein. Never\before did the Alumni revisit in such numbers their Alma Mater. j I find that three of my classmates departed this life during the pastlyear. They, with others, Who died in the service of their country and of God jwere worthily commemorated. The Alumni voted to raise $50,000 for the purple of erecting at Hanover a Memorial Hu} to the honor of the beloved men of the in stitution who had fallen in the war. Gen. Sheply, Governor of New Orleans,(was present,.and spoke eloquently therefor. Chase subscribed $5OO. Long may old Dartmouth live. Give our love tP all friends. \ l Tours affectionately, 1 \ A GOVERNOR EXPOUNDING* SCRIP- TURE. The . Tennessee Parson, Urownlow, has his own times with the repentant rebels, who claim a full resto ration to their - political rights without submitting their repentance to the estab lished ordeals of sincerity. They quoted to him the Scripture parable of the prod igal son, especially that part of it in which the father puts upon him the best robe, etc Whereupon. ’ ‘ the ' (Governor puts on the parson’s coat, and. gives them the following exegesis and applica tion of the parable:— First—The Prodigal Son did not secede ;he went with his father’s consent, Snd, as the Scriptures indicate, with, his blessing. Next, he went ; _he did not stay and villify the old man in his own house. He asked for some thing to start him in the world; he. did not present a pistol to the old man’s breast and demand his greenbacks or watch. He received the portion his father gave.him; he did not press it —a modern Southern name for . steal ing. And receiving it, he started out ‘ ‘to seek his fortune.” He did not retire to the south side of the old man’s farm, and join a band of robbers who were plundering the old man, apd his. law-atjding neighbors. Receiving his portion, he quietly took his journey into a far country. Finally, he repented of his folly, not because the old man whipped him into repentance, but because be “ came to himselt” and saw that he had wasted his sub stance in riotous living. He went back home, not with murder in his heart, boasting how many he had killed, and threatening what he would do, but he bowed down in honest con trition, and ’asked all sorts of pardon. He didn’t return saying, I have- fought you four years, and until I was overpowered,” but he went back crying “Father, I have tin ned against heaven, and in thy sight, and am no more worthy'to be called , thy son,” and imploringly said. “Make me as one of thy hired servants.” He went home, because, throughout his entire course of riotous -living, his heart was there, He .did not return. de manding his “rights,” his property and his baek rents. He did not ask instant par don upon the faith of an oath of amnesty, but proposed to prove his repentance genuine by his works. ■ The story of the Prodigal Son is one of sin cere, deep, heartfelt and voluntary repentance for a great wrong. Do our. returning rebels come repenting of their unparalleled crimes ? As long as rebellion showed any signs of suc cess did they show any signsrof repentance? ■Are they coming back because they love the Union, or were about to “perish with hunger ?” All who return peaceably to their homes, cultivate friendly relations, and abstain from hostile acts, discountenancing every at tempt at . disorder, should be met .with' the same spirit, and treated with leniency When they manifest a hostile spirit, make them bite the dust. Ip we lift up our eyes to heaven, His glory shineth forth; if we cast them down upon the earth, it is full of The hills and the valleys rejoice and sing; fields, rivers and woods resound His; praise. Ilefas nf nut ffi[raw]re;s. Sabbath Evening Udion Prater Meet ing.—We hear that a meeting of this kind is maintained through the sujnmer in Rev. Dr. T.. J. Shepherd’s Church, Buttonwood street above Fifth, in this city. We record with great satisfaction any arrangements for keeping us from spiritual stagnation during the “vacation” dearth. A friend who was present at the meeting above named last Sab bath evening, informs us that the attendance was good, and the services animated. Mineral Point, Wis.—We learn, through some scraps of information coming along with a business letter, that our church in* this place, the pastorate of Rev. E. B. Miner, is enjoying thrift, spiritual and temporal. At the com mencement of Mr. Miner’s labors there, one year ago, there was a membership of sixty-two, of whom ten we reported as absent. The attendance upon the Sab bath-school was less than one hundred. This last, teachers included, is now more than-two hundred. During the year, the additions to the church have been— by fetter, eleven, and by profession, six teen. The whole membership, not includ ing those reported absent, is now seventy nine. The church is liberal to its minis ter, the value of donations of one kind and another, during the year, being not less than two hundred dollars. There was a protracted meeting held last win ter with good result^! . Cincinnati.—We learn that the Second Presbyterian Church in this city, (late Dr. Thompson’s,) has failed in the effort to secure Mr. Ganse, of New York, as a pastor. Mr. Ganse feels himself too deeply rooted in his present pastor ate, and too much needed ,in his eccle siastical connection, (Reformed Dutch,) to be at liberty to obey the call. Interesting Services.—The Pres bytery of Detroit held a special meeting in Pontiac, on the afternoon of the 29th ultimo, and by a unanimous vote re ceived the Presbyterian Church of that place under their care. This church haß been ever since its organization, a period of more than twenty years, connected with the .Old School, but had recently resolved, with only one dissenting vote, to change its connection, believing that such a step would add much to its strength and prosperity. The occasion was one of deep interest to all concerned. ,In the evening, Rev. W. H. McGiffert, formerly of North Adams, -Mass., who has been laboring jvith the Church for a month past, having been regularly re ceived from the Presbytery of Albany, N. Y., was installed pastor. Introduc tory exercises and constitutional ques tions by the Moderator, Rev. Mr, Hill, of Birmingham; sermon by Rev. Dr. Hogarth, of. DetroitoYrom 1 Cor. xiii. 13 ; the installing player was offered by Rev. Mr. Goven, of Brandon; charge to the newly-constituted bishop by bis brother,, B.ev. J, ,N. McGiffert, of Sau quoit, N. Y.; charge to the congrega tion, by Rev. W. A; McCorkle, of De 'tgoft'; benediction by the pastor. The seWices throughout were most solemn and impressive, and the house was crowded to its utmost capacity, and many were unable to obtain. admission. R— Evangelist. .* Ordinationin California.—We learn fronf The Pacific, that Rev. J. M, Alex ander, a licentiate of Maui; Sandwich Islands, was ordained by San Jose Pres bytery to the gospel ministry, at' San Leandro, on Sabbath, the 11th June. Sermon by Rev. E. G- Beckwith. Mr. Alexander is laboring at San Leandro with encouraging prospects. E. E. Adams. Sad News of a California Pastor. —We mentioned some months since the election of Rev. Wm. M. Martin to the pastorship of our church in San Jose, and the favorable prospect of a pleasant and useful service there. Sickness in terfered with his installation at the ap pointed |j.me, and we now read with pain,]in The Pacific of June 2T, that he remains in San Francisco “with little prospect of a recovery. ” On applications received from the Churches they serve, the following ministers were com missioned by the Presbyterian Committee of Some Missions at their last regular meeting, June 10, 1865. Twenty-eight of whom were under commission last year:— Rev. J. R. Presbyterial Mission nary, Missouri. “ C. Hudson, Ellsworth, N. Y. “ J. E. Long, Hublersburgh and Scott’s Mills, Pa. “ George M. Life, Nichols, N. Y. “ 0. W. Norton, Somerset, Mich. “ W. M. Kain, Weston, Mo. “ B. Russell, Tyrone and Sugar Hill, New York. “ A. D . Jack, Shiloh, Gilead, and Frank lin, Ind. “ W. S. Taylor, Petersburgh and Deer field, Mich. .“. J- G. Kanouse, Cottage Grove, Wis. “ J. L. French, Batavia and Bantam, Ohio. “ H. 0. Howland, Girard, 1 Pa. j “ A. Conejßraceville, Ohio. “ Joseph* Wilson, Pleasant Prairie, His. “ G. G; Smith, Montana Exploring Mis- sionary. “ A. Herrick, Mundy, Mich. “ P. R. Knine, Virgil, N. Y. “ G. M. Smith, Texas Valley, N. Y. “ W. M. Martin, Virginia City, Nevada. “ H. Ward,'Minneapolis, Minn. “ J. W. Elliott, East Tennessee. “ P.'S. Davies, Birmingham, Pa. . “ Isaiah Reed, Nevada, lowa. “ O. M. Legate, Carthage, N. Y. “ E. P. Parsons, Constableville, N. Y. “ Jas. Knox, Cedar Rapids, lowa. “ J. A. Prime, Troy, W. Y, “ W. Jones, Eolla, Mo. “ P. Griffes, Carlton, N. Y. “ X. Betts, Vienna, Ohio. “ Marcus Smith, Collamer, N. Y., Presbyterian Rooms, 15.0 Nassau Street, New York; HOME missions. THE LATE BISHOP POTTER. The estimation in which this deceased divine was held by the Christian public at large, justifies our laying before our readers a notice of his services and cha racter from the secular press. It is an example of the strength with which he had intrenched himself in the affection of the whole community around him. We copy the following from the Evening Bulletin, of this city:— Bishop Potter was originally engaged in mercantile pursuits in this city, as salesman in the book store of his brothers, Sheldon and Paraclete Potter, whose establishment, under the firm of Sheldon Potter & Co., in Chest nut street, below Third, is well remembered by many of our citizens. He was a native of New York State, having been born at Beekman, now Lagrange, Duchess County, July 10, 1800. After a short residence in Philadelphia, as we have stated, he entered Union College, New York; he graduated in the year 1818, became a tutor in the same College in 1819, and was elected Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in that institution in 1821. He, studied for the min istry, and was elected deacon in 1821; and priest in 1824. He was elected President of Geneva, now Hobart College, New York, in 1825, but did not accept the appointment. In 1826 he was called to ,the rectorship of St. Paul’s Church, Boston, where he remained ■for five years. He was then elected Vice- President and Professor of Moral Philosophy in Union College, New York.' In that insti tution he remained for fourteen years. Dur ing that time he recieved the degree of Doc tor of Divinity from Harvard University and Gambier College. Upon the suspension of Bishop H. U. Onderdonk from the Episcopate of Pennsyl vania in 1845, he was elected by a large majority of the Convention to fill the vacancy, the laity voting unanimously in his favor. He waS nominated by Rev. Dr. Suddards,- after a long and exciting contest between Drs. Tyng and Bowmanj on the 23d of May, 1845, and was elected on the first ballot. His.con secration took place on the 23d of September of the same year, and he at once entered on the arduous duties of his office. After twelve years of incessant labor his vigorous constitu tion succumbed, and in the spring of 1858 he went abroad and spent a year principally in the south of Prance and Italy, returning greatly improved, though not thoroughly re stored to health. Since that time he has taxed his strength to the utmost to keep pace with his constantly increasing duties, but al though ably assisted, first by Bishop Bow man and afterwards by Bishop Stevens, he has at last sunk under the burden of care and responsibility which for twenty years he has so nobly borne. ' The tokens of his work are everywhere around us. In the most immediate field of his official labors there are many monuments of. his great.and rare abilities. The Episco pal Church in Pennsylvania has trebled itself in the number of its clergy, parishes, and communicants,- under . his administration. Numerous educational and charitable institu tions have grown up under his fostering care, and-many others have been transformed into a condition of vigorous usefulness that they never knew until lfis master-hand was laid upon them. "The Church Hospital, the Divinity School, and the Protestant Episco pal Academy, are three institutions of great importance to which owe their existence mainly to his influence. But Bishop Fbtter was too large-hearted a man to confine .himself within the pale of his own denomination. The Colonization Society, the Pennsylvania Bible Society, the Asylum for Imbecile Children, the Deaf and Dumb Institution, .the Magdalen Asylum were all objects of his deepest interest, and his bene ficent influence was largely felt in them all If the Episcopal Church sustains an irrepara ble loss in the death of its revered Diocesan, the city of Philadelphia has also lost a citi zen whos' broad philanthropy has been felt and recognized, to an extent which has rarely if ever been exercised by any one who has gone before' him. His catholic and liberal spirit made its mark upon our community very soon after be came among us, and men of all creeds and professions, united to bear testimony to the worth of this truly great man.' As a patriot, a philanthropist and a Christian gentleman, Bishop Potter would have stood in the foremost rank, .even if he had occupied the position of a private citizen in the community. •We cannot trust ourselves to speak of Bishop Potter in' his personal and private ■relations, within the limits of this hurried sketch. For twenty years "has this good man twined himself about the very heart-strings, of those who have been privileged to know him well. His character was all cast upon a grand scale, was a simple, indescrib able digmty jBBt. him, both in person and manner, whicParways reminded us, as no other man ever did, of Washington. The mitre and the lawn sat upop him so easily and so naturally that they seemed to borrow rather than to lend official dignity. A gen tle gravity of manner never tailed to repel improper familiarity, while a cordial friend liness attracted, with an unconscious force, all who came within the circle of his influence. He was gifted with a rare degree of itesdom, a quality which never fails to command re spect, and which in him was perhaps the secret of his greatest power. The manage ment of his vast Diocese called for a constant exercise of this striking trait of his character, and his wonderful success in adjusting deli cate and difficult questions, in reconciling discordant elements and in promoting a spirit of harmonious co-operation between men, once widely separated by conflicting opinions, attest how admirably he was adapted for his post. His administrative ability in organizing and stimulating all man ner of charitable and religious work was, of the very highest order, and the impress of his power in this particular department will long be felt throughout the State. “He rests from his labors and his works do follow him.” There is no official vacancy caused by his death, as_ Bishop. Stevens becomes the pre siding Bishop without further legislation. There were none of, his large family with him at the time of his death, except his wife. His youngest son, who accompanied him on his voyage, as far as Panama, returned to Hew V ork from that place. His remains will be brought home for interment. MONROE DOCTRINE. We have been frequently asked to give a succinct statement of what the 11 Monroe Doctrine,” so often spoke of, really is. The occasion of the declaration on the part of Mr. Monroe, at that time President of the United States, was the correspondence be tween Mr. Canning, English Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Mr. Bush, American Minister to the Court of St, James, in 1823, in reference to the interference of the French Government in the affairs of the Spanish American Colonies, Jn his f s n 9 n o Ua L Me ?! a S e t 0 Congress, in December, } , OIBOe utteranoe to the two following sentiments, which have ever trine’’ k “ OWn “ th ° “ Monroe Doc- A n- 1 ; Jkat it was impossible for the Allied Powers to extend nheir political system to any part of America without en dangering our peace and happiness; and equally impossible, therefore., that we should behold such interposition with in difference.” \ “2. That the American Continent, by the free and independent condition which it had assumed and maintained, was hence forth not to be considered as subject for future colonization .by any European Power.” — Pres. Banner. lUligunt* IttWligme. PRESBYTERIAN. The Huntingdon Valley Church. —Our friends in that most delightful spot, Hunting don Valley, about ten miles from Philadel phia, are enjoying the blessing of God on their church. The church, an offshoot iroin the old Abington Church, was organized about five years ago, under the pastoral care of the Rev. George J. Mingins. When Mr. Mingins left it for the service of the Christian Commission, the Rev. Jas. B. Kennedy was called to the pastorate. It has prospered un der his ministry to such an extent as to be well filled, and generally in .prosperous con dition. Over twenty members have been added to its communion within the last year,— Presbyterian Standard. Prosperity.—They have inHlinoisa town' ofabaut 1000 inhabitants, in which the United Presbyterians have a church, of which the pastor, through the Pittsburgh organ of that church, gives the followingreffeshingreport:— During our last communion season we had an addition of twenty-seven to our membership. Daring the last fifteen months we have re ceived eighty-five members. A goodly num ber.of these were received on profession of their faith, and some of them had not in early life enjoyed the advantages of a religious edu cation. . We have in regular attendance upon the ordinances of God’s house a large number of those who until recently seldom entered a house of worship. We have a good Sabbath school, and a Bible class of more than forty young men and women, many of whom "are in families of no ecclesiastical connection. We have during the winfer an average atten dance of about fifty atourweekly p-ayer-meet ing. At this, season of the year the attend ance is not so large. Tne Board of Home ’ Missions aided us last year \o the amount of. $l5O, but we are now self-sustaining. Well Represented in tee Arms. —The Rev. I. N. Candee, D.D., inuhe course of his recent address to the Cumberland Presby terian Assembly, as tlie.delegatCof the Gen eral Assembly, said: —“Four soils and ason in-law have been in the Government service, and one has returned home sick. \ have now three sons and a son-in-law in the service of my country. Some of them have Men id a score or more of battles, one in two or three battles where every soul around and ’behind himwas.shot down, and he left standingkalone, yet unharmed.” • ■ \ A New Orleans Secessionist Pastor Back again.—The New Orleans newspapers announce the return of the Rev. Dr. B. M/Pal mer, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of New Orleans, to that csty. He has tAen temporarily, filling the plate of the late Br. Thornwell, in Columbia Seminary, and afto acting as pastor of the Presbyterian church in Columbia, South Carolina. \ \ Proposed Renewal, op aGreat Solem nity.—A Committee of the General Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, in the United States, consisting of Re*. Drs. Wil son, T. W. J. Wylie, and otheh, have, in obedience to the order of the Synod, over timed to the lower judicatories the'following interesting proposition:—That the Oiyenant, which was adopted as the oath of God,in the city of Philadelphia, in the year 18(3, be taken at the next annualmeeting of the SjuoS: that in the. interim, the people be prepamj by the ministrations of the pulpits through out the. whole church, and by the prayers m both ministers and elders, and alPthe peopled for a copious outpouring of the Holy Ghost, so\ that the hearts of all maybe “stirred up,” \ so as that “ they shall come and do work in \ the house of the Lord of hosts their God that the Thursday immediately following the day of the opening of Synod, be observed as ' a day of fasting, humiliation and prayer, and that the following day be appointed for read ing and subscribing to the Covenant! Itis fur ther proposed “that the Covenant when taken by us, shall be presented to our ecclesiastical connections in tne British Isles, and\to the evangelical churches in this land, and through out the world; and that all who duly take it shall be entitled to communion and feliwship the one with the other in sealing ordnances, as well as in acts of official ministration. ’ ’ We are unable te state what is tfr sub stance of this Covenant, not having,‘or a long time past, had our attention turnedo it. We see, however, appended to this propsal, a resolution that it be printed with the oin utes, which we suppose will soon appear. are sorry to infer, .from the resolution quted above,, mat'the taking of it is to be maddhe condition of inter-communion and particia tion in ministerial services with otor churches. We should be glad to learn tat we have misinterpreted it. . In other jeßpecj, we should look upon the scene which the &- nod will present, if the proposal is carrij out, as one of high Christian sublimity. \ REFORMED DUTCH. Board op Foreign Missions—The foJ lowing, is an extract from the Report of the Committee on Foreign Missions, submitted to and adopted by .General Synod at its recent session. The sum total of receipts during the .past year amounts to 22. Of this sum $2,300 was given by the American Bible So ciety, leaving $79,738 22 as an amount con tributed by our people to the advancement of tbis cause. At tbe close of the last fiscal year a debt of $lO,OOO weighed heavily upon’the Board: but in response to special effort, it was swept off, and the hope-was that the Board should this year be able to come before Synod without a similar feature in the front of its report. But facts exist and circumstan ces control, irrespective of human preferen ces. The Board closes tbe year in debt to a serious amount. The amount borrowed upon securities of the Board, added to other obli gations, makes the present indebtedness some $12,000 or thereabouts. Moreover, the Board, at this moment, are in pressing need of funds to pay their mis sionaries. The liabilities for the next thirty days will be about $7,000. There is not the half of the sum named in the hands of the easurer, and there is no way of borrowing o e on ! y 001115(5 , therefore, left —to which the Synod is shut up—is to bring the matter before the whole Church, so as to secure the prompt, vigorous, and simultaneous action of all the churches of the denomination. episcopal Away to his Work.-The Con says :-Rev. George Whipple, abrother ot the bi&hop, who has been at Faribault for some months, W& family passed through this gity on briday last, en route for his new field of labor at Hawaii, Sandwich Islands. He will remain m New York until the arrival of the bishop, when he sails for his far-off haven accompanied by the prayers and good wishes of his friends. / Ite-pRDiNAWON.-On the, 18th uk, the Kevi J. W. Bonham, formerjy a minister of